Fashion micro-enterprises in LONDON BERLIN MILANPhase 1 Prof. Angela McRobbie, Dr Dan Strutt, Carolina Bandinelli and Dr Bettina Springer 01 This project is part of the AHRC funded programme titled CREATe, based in Glasgow University, Law School, with Goldsmiths University of London as a partner. For further information see www.create.ac.uk The research on fashion micro-enterprises has been undertaken with further support from Goldsmiths University of London. 02 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This report provides an account of a series of interviews, observational visits and hosted events with 8-10 fashion designers in three cities: London, Berlin and Milan, carried out from 2012-2016. In some cases we interviewed the same designers two or three times over a period of nearly three years. The research project also entailed documented conversations and meetings with a range of fashion experts, consultants, legal advisors and policy makers in each city. Often these took place within the context of organised events undertaken as part of the research process. The aim was to investigate the kind of start-ups or micro-enterprises which have come into being in the last decade. We were interested in whether these were the outcome of pro-active urban creative economy policies or if they were self-organised initiatives, a reaction to the crisis of the euro-zone of 2008 and the consequent recession. Was it the case that long-term austerity policies and exceptionally high rates of youth and graduate unemployment across Europe had spawned these kinds of seemingly independent economic activities? We were also minded to consider the role of intellectual property (IP) and copyright in fashion as part of the wider UK government agenda for growth and wealth creation within the creative economy as a whole. 1 BERLIN RESEARCH 2012-2016 LONDON RESEARCH 2012-2016 In Berlin our research activities pinpointed a distinctive In London, in contrast to our study of Berlin, we urban milieu of micro-enterprises that are mostly found an exceptionally competitive environment female-led. The fashion scene in Berlin has benefited for upcoming fashion designers and a low level from pro-active cultural policies undertaken at Senate, of fashion social enterprise activity. The high cost Federal and EU level. There have been modest but of rental space militated against a wider range highly effective modes of support, often providing of small-scale fashion micro-enterprises being a bridge from unemployment or semi-employment able to establish and sustain themselves. Instead into self-employment or self-entrepreneurship. there were clear signs of a ‘winner takes all’ ethos. Of key significance is the availability of affordable But not everyone can be a prize-winner, and the space even as this is increasingly a contentious difficulties facing many talented young fashion issue as rents rise (albeit within a framework of designers graduating from some of the best UK art secure and protected tenancies). We found three schools and universities do not surface in policy forms of creative practice among our cohort. discussions. This may be partly because there is a strong self-organised network or professional 1. The fine-art oriented avant-gardist designer culture which recognises the different levels of for whom working with and alongside creative practice including those extending into artists in the city was important. As Esther the middle range of companies and high street Perbandt said, ‘my accessories such as fashion retailers. The long history of outstanding bags and purses are mobile art objects’. fashion pedagogy in the UK art school system has 2. The unique and embedded set of fashion contributed to this idea of professional fashion social enterprises led by women who were also practice with the result that working for the ‘high constantly developing new ways of re-imagining street’ carries prestige, with many designers fashion as a creative activity especially in regard moving from jobs in high fashion to the more to socially-valuable employment in the city. mid-range fashion companies. Thus we discovered 3 Hundreds of female fashion micro-producers three forms of professional practice in London. spread across the city (as evidenced by the NEMONA work1) but mainly concentrated in 1. Independent designer status, reliant the poorer, though now rapidly gentrifying, however on forms of sponsorship by, neighbourhoods of Kreuzberg and Neukoelln. Many or collaborations with, major fashion, were often living on a low income and producing accessory and other lifestyle companies. one off items for sale in local outlets or online. 2. Small-scale independent designer micro- enterprises which have been established over a Our conclusions in the Berlin study showed a longer period of time pre-dating the escalating relatively low importance of IP and copyright in the rents and high cost of space in London and light of wider issues to keep going, make a living, and having created a high quality niche identity. participate in a lively, creative, and socially meaningful 3. Professional designers working in the practice. Overall we encountered patterns of mainstream of the fashion industry but socialised models of fashion co-operation in Berlin. in a context where designer status is not However the obstacles facing Berlin designers compromised but instead accentuated should not be under-estimated. As one of the for what high design content and leading fashion consultants, Prof Oliver MacConnell innovatory styling brings to the label. commented, ‘the mainstream of the fashion industry across Germany does not pull its weight when it Overall collaborations and consultancies provide comes to supporting or even engaging with young economic lifelines for London designers. But there talented designers’. This lack of support can lock are clear and manifest problems resulting from the the highly-trained Berlin designers into a situation over-centralisation of fashion culture in London. whereby it is difficult to envisage higher returns This has contributed to a severe urban imbalance and any degree of financial security. In effect they despite the existence of high calibre art schools have to get used to the idea of living like an artist. in almost every city across the UK, and given the 1. NEMONA is the name of the not-for-profit network agency for fashion producers founded by Dr Ares Kalandides, one of the CREAte team in Berlin. See www.nemona.de 2 obvious advantages of living and working in less We recommend: A Voluntary Code of Practice for prohibitively expensive places. There is then an Intellectual Property be established. This would be agglomeration effect with the fashion industry comparable to the various other social awareness and so many of its adjacent institutions including campaigns in regard to ethical, environmental the fashion media based in London and the SE of and labour issues for the fashion industry. Fashion England. This is the context in which our cohort media, various lobbying bodies, schools of art of designers have sought to develop and protect and design and universities, as well as companies, their careers and occupational pathways through would also promote and sign up to the code of self-organised professional fashion urban networks. practice. We also recommend: that the Berlin model of fashion social enterprises, as the most egalitarian and socially inclusive model, is one MILAN RESEARCH 2013-2016 that could be of value for the development of In Milan the very early signs of a start-up culture, one regional and local fashion economies. It would that seemed to emerge directly from the widespread be advantageous for those wanting to work in an unemployment among young graduates across alternative mode of fashion production in the UK the country, confronted us. This social problem of to have strong contacts with their counterparts in unemployment was especially severe in the light of both Berlin and Milan. More broadly we recommend the euro-zone crisis of 2008. The young designers that current debates about both ‘start up culture’ we interviewed were often working in pairs but at and ‘creative economy’ pay more attention to this stage were not yet part of a wide network of questions of job creation and youth unemployment, producers. Most apparent among the predominantly especially in euro-zone countries and that gender female cohort was the psychological relief found issues alongside those of ethnicity are more through setting up as a micro-enterprise, even foregrounded. We flag the value of international though the returns so far were small and the family networking for learning support within this field still needed to support their offspring with ‘bed of professional practice. Finally we see this whole and board’. This relief, to be at least active and in sector of fashion micro-enterprises not as a weak the labour market, exists in a context where there alternative to conventional employment, nor was little to nothing in the way of government- as simply a precarious outcome of the modern funded programmes for job creation. However, work society, but as a sector of the global fashion the Milan designers were able to plug into the industry which has the potential for developing rich industrial and artisanal networks which have a more engaged and critical creative economy been long recognised as being at the forefront of partly through the high degree of self-reflexivity post-industrial and post-Fordist fashion and textile and the dense social networking required of production (as various sociologists have shown). these young professionals. In addition we cite the The young people we interviewed understood how key role to be played by the universities and art to be entrepreneurial and how to bring together schools here, in the context of ‘lifelong learning’. creativity with brand building. They possessed, in difficult circumstances, a kind of instinctive sense of Italian cultural production.
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